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Here’s what you want to know.
By Natasha Frost
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Good morning.
We ignore the protests after a resolution in the Breonna Taylor case, the most recent circular on a U. S. -made coronavirus vaccine and Finland’s pandemic dog front line.
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And then: The company’s clinical director said Johnson
Official Comments: President Trump, who has continually stated that a vaccine would be in a position before Election Day, said Wednesday that the White House would “possibly or possibly not” approve the new Food and Drug Administration rules that require outdoor experts to interfere before the firm approves a coronavirus vaccine.
Here are the updates and maps of the pandemic.
In developments:
The New York Metropolitan Opera has canceled its entire 2020-21 season until next September, casting a shadow over the likelihood that cultural life will resume early in the United States.
Saudi Arabia said it would allow up to 6,000 Saudi citizens and citizens per day at the Grand Mosque in Mecca from 4 October.
France raised its Covid-19 alert point in various parts of the country on Wednesday, introducing new restrictions on public meetings in several cities.
In an original approach, Belgian Prime Minister Sophie Wilmes accepted the rules, requiring mask in crowded areas, rather than anywhere outdoors, as she had ordered this summer.
Around 600 pubs serving only drinks may reopen in Northern Ireland on Wednesday for the first time in six months.
Despite more than a month of mass protests against his regime, Aleksandr Lukashenko took the oath of office for a sixth term as president of Belarus in a secret rite on Wednesday.
“It’s the day of our victory, convincing and fateful,” Mr. Lukashenko has about 700 visitors invited to his inauguration, according to a transcript posted on the presidential website. “We have only elected the president of the country. We stand up for our values. , our non-violent life, our sovereignty and our independence”.
Voice of opposition: Opposition leader Pavel Latushko denounced the president’s resolution and called on the public to “immediately release a crusade of civil disobedience. “And Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, Lukashenko’s main opponent in the election, denounced the rite as a “farce” and said that she was “the only leader chosen by the Belarusian people. “
After a hundred nights of protests against Breonna Taylor’s police killing and a months-long investigation, a grand jury accused a former police officer in Louisville, Kentucky of endangering Taylor’s neighbors with reckless gunfire. and no one charged in office.
Ms. Taylor, a 26-year-old black emergency technique, was killed in a failed drug raid at her home in March, passing her call and symbol in a national motion that is not easy for social justice.
Protests have broken out in the country’s cities. In Louisville, protesters screamed in disgust after the grand jury’s decision. Later that night, two policemen were shot and killed.
Legal explanation: because the police did not fire first, it was the young woman’s boyfriend who opened fire; he said he thought the police were intruders. many lawyers had no idea that officials were unlikely to be charged.
Go further: A New York Times investigation explores how Ms. Taylor landed amid a fatal drug raid.
Although much of Latin America was devastated by the pandemic, Mexico was particularly affected, with more than 73,000 deaths. In Mexico, the district of Iztapalapa, which houses the largest product market in the Western Hemisphere, above it, has the epimiddle of epimiddle. , recording more coronavirus deaths than any other component of the capital, which is itself the center of the national crisis.
Our hounds visited Iztapalapa, where poverty, a dense population and a bustling industry combined to devastating effect. Workers in the region had few options. “I have nothing left,” said a salesman who tried to stay home but ran out of money. “Either you have to pass out and face the virus, or you have to sit here and starve. ” In May, one in 10 more people on a respirator in Mexico City in the market.
Aleksei Navalny: The head of the Russian opposition was discharged from a hospital in Germany and could be completely poisoned with a highly poisonous nerve agent, doctors said Wednesday, as European leaders discussed a reaction in Moscow.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg: The Supreme Court justice, who died Friday, was revered as a pioneer of women’s rights in a rite at the Washington court. His coffin was then taken out, where he will rest to rest while the Americans say good-bye to them for the next two days.
Migration crisis: The European Union announced on Wednesday that it would lead reluctant member countries to settle for a not unusual formula for treating asylum seekers by providing monetary incentives and acting more temporarily to deport other people who are denied asylum .
Instant: Above, a tracking dog in Finland trained to smell the coronavirus, some dogs running at Helsinki airport were trained to stumble upon an infection when passengers arrived in about a minute.
Lives lived: Juliette Gréco, the muse of the postwar bohemian Paris song who has become the wonderful girl of French song and a world-famous actress, died Wednesday at the age of 93.
What we’re looking for: this chart says “Quick Times at Ridgemont High”. Carole Landry of the Briefings team writes: “The performances/readings of those stars: Brad Pitt, Jennifer Aniston, Julia Roberts, Morgan Freeman, Matthew McConaughey, among them – are anything to see. It’s a pleasure. “
Cook: This corn polenta with baked eggs appears in Melissa Clark’s “From the Pantry” series, which began in March to help others stranded in the house kitchen and dispel their pandemic anxieties. Melissa takes out the series: as an initial gift, here are five exceptional recipes.
Read: In “Let Love Rule”, Lenny Kravitz recounts the first 25 years of his life, ending with the release of his first album in 1989. The story he tells is about fame, but about the influences that encouraged his unique hybrid musical of soul and vintage rock.
View: Looking for new streaming options? Here’s our list of 10 movies for moments.
There’s no explanation for why getting bored at home. Our At Home collection has almost infinite concepts about what to read, cook, look at and do.
Under foreign pressure to do more to combat global warming, Chinese leader Xi Jinping has made a wonderful promise about emissions in particular, but has presented few details. Steven Lee Myers, our head of the Beijing office, took a closer look at what this means.
Xi’s commitment is a tectonic replacement in politics, but not yet in practice. As a component of the Paris weather deal, China promised that its emissions would peak around 2030. Xi promised Tuesday to return to the schedule, but did not provide details. The biggest surprise, analysts say, is its promise to achieve carbon neutrality, which means China’s net carbon emissions will succeed at 0, until 2060. emissions manufacturer, with 28% of the global total.
China is expected to oppose recent emissions trends; analysts warned that there are worrying trends in the country; coal consumption, which had declined from 2013 to 2017, has to rise again in recent years as the government seeks to stimulate growth.
After the pandemic ended, China’s economy recovered. Research showed that in May, carbon dioxide emissions were 4% higher than last year. China also granted more building permits for coal-fired power plants in the first six months of 2020 than it did. 2018 and 2019.
The new policy may only be 1. 4 billion people in China. Li Shuo, policy adviser to Greenpeace China, said the commitment required a complete transformation of the Chinese economy. “Think about it: how we eat, how we consume energy, how we produce our food, we will have to absolutely rearrange the way we get to the paintings,” he said.
That’s all for today’s news. I wish you a Thursday.
– Natasha
Thanks to Melissa Clark for the recipe and Theodore Kim and Jahaan Singh for the rest of the break. You can sign up for the team in briefing@nytimes. com.
PS We pay attention to “The Daily”. Our most recent episode is about an opening for anti-abortion activists in the United States. You can locate all our riddles here @NYT_first_said.
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